31st Indian Armoured Division

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
1st Indian Armoured Division
31st Indian Armoured Division
EngagementsWorld War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Thomas Corbett
Robert Wordsworth

The 31st Indian Armoured Division was an armoured division of the Indian Army during World War II, formed in 1940, originally as the 1st Indian Armoured Division; it consisted of units of the British Army and the British Indian Army. When it was raised, it consisted of two Armoured Brigades (the 1st and 2nd Indian Armoured Brigades) and one Motor Brigade (the 3rd Indian Motor Brigade).

History

In October 1941,[2] by which time the 1st Indian Support Group had joined the division, the 1st Indian Armoured Division was re-named as the 31st Indian Armoured Division. The brigades were re-named the 251st and 252nd Indian Armoured Brigades and the 31st Indian Support Group (the Motor Brigade's name remained unchanged).

In mid-1942, by which time the support group had been disbanded, the 251st Brigade was detached and the rest of the division was shipped to join the

Italian Campaign as an independent brigade. The closest the rest of the division came to combat was in April 1944 when it was rushed to Egypt to crush a mutiny among the Greek 1st Infantry Brigade
.

The tank regiments received M4 Shermans in November 1943, thought to be in preparation for a transfer to Italy, which never came about and only drove them in Iraq, Syria and Egypt.[3][4] The 31st Indian Armoured Division was re-named the 1 Armoured Division of the soon-to-be independent Indian Army in October 1945.[5]

With the 31st Division re-named, there was no division numbered '31' in the post-independence Indian Army after 1947 for over twenty years. The 31 Armoured Division was re-established as part of the Indian Army in 1972.[2] It was raised at Jhansi and remains headquartered there as part of XXI Corps. It is also known as the White Tiger Division.

Structure in 1942

252nd Indian Armoured Brigade

  • Brigade Commander G.Carr-White
    • 14th/20th Hussars
    • 14th Prince of Wales's Own Scinde Horse
    • 1/
      4th Bombay Grenadiers

3rd Indian Motor Brigade

An Indian Pattern Carrier Mk IIA named 'Dhar IV', North Africa of the type used by 3rd Indian Motor Brigade

Divisional Units

Citations

  1. ^ Cole p. 83
  2. ^ a b Renaldi & Rikhye 2011, p. 52.
  3. ^ India's Armour. By Mike Bennighof
  4. ^ "avalanchepress".
  5. ^ Renaldi & Rikhye 2011, p. 34, 52.
  6. ^ a b c Mackenzie (1951), p. 71
  7. ^ "orbat" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-12-18. Retrieved 2008-07-10.

References

External links